Showing posts with label the joy of being. Show all posts
Showing posts with label the joy of being. Show all posts

Sunday, August 14, 2011

The Path Of Life

The biggest problem you ever have to overcome in life is yourself.

Dana Bate
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I read through the news every morning. I ignore the headlines because they are misleading. Much of the media just grabs attention through headlines that don't appropriately reflect the story. So I read the story and thus am informed about the desperate situations going on in the country and the world. I wonder what a simpleton like myself can do about any of it and feel impotent.

I look around my apartment at all the chores and cleaning up that has to be done and chastise myself for my reluctance to drop everything else and do it.

I open my check book, look at my balance and wonder how I'm going to meet my finacnial obligations without depriving myself of coffee and cigarettes. I feel bad that I can only squeeze out a $10 contribution to organizations to whom I would like to give hundreds.

I read through my journal entry for the day and worry over whether or not I have expressed myself properly, if my ideas are clearly written and the motives behind what I've offered are to benefit the reader to the best of my ability.

But all of these thins are secondary to the errors of judgement, failures, mistakes of life, remorse, regrets, hopes, doubts and fears for the future that attached themselves to me like my own skin.

Those nasty parasites are enemies to happiness, and yet how easily I invite them in and become their host. I can clean out the kitchen sink. Why can't I clean out my head? Because to worry about myself and entertain all my faults and flaws is a habit. And that habit is built upon one embedded, rock solid, ice cold misconception. It's called "material personality."

You are not what you eat. You are not what you see in the mirror. You are not your job description. You are not what it says on your drivers licence, not your social security number, not your shoe size, nor your skin color and you are certainly not what you are subconsciously worried about right now.

All of it is part of the masquerade of human life, the games we play, the show we put on for ourselves and others. As an actor I was certified to depict human life in all its facets and to understand just how fictional most of that life is. If there is no other lamp I can carry forth out of 50 years of being a performing artist it is the one that lights up the path to being and the joy of being, the path to freedom from our self imposed limited personalities. Holding on adamantly to who we think we are just makes becoming who we are more difficult.

As human beings, on whatever level of existence, we are more interesting, complex, creative, adaptable. versatile and capable than we give ourselves credit for. The path to life is to discover that, understand it and prove it.

Dana Bate - The Real Vagabond
Never give up.
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SUMMER QUESTION

Summer is moving along, people.

It's a long, hot, sticky summer, so here's a hot, sticky question for you. Don't let the recent New York State decision rob you of your thunder.

Same sex marriage. Should it be legal or not? If so, why? If not, why not?

dbdacoba@aol.com

Only 14 answers so far.

You have until the last day of summer, but don't dally.
I eagerly await your answer.

DB
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WEEKEND CONTEST

4 Weird Songs
___________________
ZEY NKZ VQ AFQ KCCUQ ED ZEYM NEAFQM'T QZQ, VYA ZEY'MQ IEA KCCQKUWIR AE NQ.

W REA K METQ VQAJQQI NZ AEQT DMEN JKUBWIR VKMQDEEA AFMEJRF AFQ FEAFEYTQ AE ZEY, VKVZ.

JFE JKT FKXWIR IKCEJQEIT JWAF LETQCFWIQ JFWUQ VEIQCKMA JKT KHKZ KA AFQ JKM?

GWRKMQAAQT KIS JFWTBQZ KIS JWUS, JWUS JENQI, AFQZ'UU SMWXQ ZEY GMKYZ, AFQZ'UU SMWXQ ZEY WITKIQ.

Good luck.
DB
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Wednesday, July 20, 2011

Delight Thyself

Most men can seldom accept even the simplest and most obvious truth if it obliges them to admit the falsity of conclusions which they have delighted in explaining to colleagues, which they have proudly taught to others, and which they have woven thread by thread into the fabric of their lives.

Thomas Gold
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What do I think of religion you ask? We, alright, you didn't ask but I'm going to tell you anyway. When I think of religion I don't think of it from any particualr faith or tradition. As it says in my profile, I'm not a fan of rules, rituals and summations. Those things may close the doors securely against doubt, but they also lock doors.

Among by rather large collections of books I have many on the subject of religions. Near my desk and read in rotation are The Book of Common Prayer, The Book of Mormon, The Bahir (what's that?), the Daily Missal, 2 books on Catholic Saints, 3 translations of The Bible, The Koran, Oahspe (what's that?), The Yoga-Sutra, Tao Teching, a Guide to Wicca, The Zohar, all 22 volumes with English translation and commentary (what's that?).

I also have writings by Saint Augustine, Gandhi, the Dalai Lama, Soren Kirkagaard, Karl Jaspers, Martin Buber, Mary Baker Eddy, Thomas Merton and Mortin Luther King, Jr. (I also read a lot of philosophy, history and psychology, so don't get excited.)

One of the obvious observations I can make is that the difference between the writings of those inspired thinkers and the way their followers practice those writings is very big. The human mind, in it's baser levels, tends to take over the simplicity, charm and joy of the spiritual life and translate it into war, bigotry, prejudice, hatred, animosity, exclusivity, limitation and ignorance. That's why I don't adhere to any one religion. I don't enjoy the dogmatic ones correcting my thinking.

The inspired writers of sacred texts were, after all, just like the rest of us. They were human beings, struggling with and trying to explain in human languages visions of deity and its grandeur. That they continued to struggle and still do, and that their followers continue to misunderstand them tends to create strange, mortal, powerless gods that no one wants to worship except the superstitious.

When the mystic knots are all untangled the answer will be very simple and obvious, and men and women will have to give up the complicated threads of theory and muddy rituals for a pure worship of the joy of being.

"Delight thyself in the Lord." (Psalm 37) As far as I'm concerned that is one of the most profound pieces of spiritual wisdom ever written. What do I think of religion? This is what I think.

Once every year throughout the world in fishing villages there is the ritual of the Blessing of the Fleet. The boats line up and sail past the peer where the local religious leader says a prayer for the successful catch and in some religions sprinkles some "holy water" toward the boat as it passes. Years ago, when I was an actor in Provincetown, Massachusetts, I was invited aboard my landlord's boat to participate. The Bishop came up from somewhere and was joined by the local priest. The priest was named Duarte and he was referred to locally as Our Father Duarte in Heaven. After the blessing we went out for a spin in the Atlantic Ocean. It was a beautiful day and a great experience.

I used to have a photograph which I took out of National Geographic of the blessing of the fleet on Kodiak Island, Alaska. In that case it was the Russian Orthodox clergy who were in charge. The bishop was there in all his robes, with a tall hat and long white beard. He had his book and was surrounded by banners depicting holy figures. Next to him was the parish priest in his robes, tall hat and black beard. They both had big, broad smiles on their faces. They were having a hell of a good time. In his hand, the priest held a white plastic squeeze bottle with the words HOLY WATER on it. I thought "Yes! There you go. If you really believe in the holy water than squirt the captain in the face if you have to, but get the water on the boat."

And that's what I think of religion.
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DB - The Vagabond
Never give up.
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SUMMER QUESTION

It's a long, hot, sticky summer, so here's a hot, sticky question for you. Don't let the recent New York State decision rob you of your thunder.

Same sex marriage. Should it be legal or not? If so, why? If not, why not?

dbdacoba@aol.com

10 answers so far.

You have until the last day of summer, but don't dally.
I eagerly await your answer.

DB
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